Millions of Tomatoes

It is that time of year again. Our patio tomato plants have finally started to get their act together.

That means we are putting tomatoes in pretty much everything we are eating right now.

Last night I made a French tomato tarte for dinner.

Here is what it looked like before it was baked.

And after:

We ate the leftovers for breakfast with a fried egg alongside this morning.

Here is the recipe I used. I modified it a bit. I partially baked the tarte crust, for about 10 minutes, so the filling wouldn’t make it soggy. I also thinly sliced a yellow onion, and caramelized it, then tossed in some chopped garlic for a few seconds. I layered that between two layers of sliced tomatoes. I used a mixture of fresh herbs from our garden, parsley, rosemary, marjoram, oregano. And I topped it with shredded Comte cheese instead of goat cheese since that is what I had. This is one of those recipes that is sort of endlessly modifiable. You could add other sautéed veggies (zucchini, red peppers, etc.), or use different kinds of cheese. You could vary the herbs, or make it spicy with either hot peppers or pepper flakes. You could add various meats as well, although this with crusty bread and a salad was plenty hearty for supper. Unlike a quiche, it doesn’t have a custard base, so it keeps better, though it certainly didn’t last long here.

What are you all doing with your fall harvest?

Author: Lorette

My name is Lorette. I learned to knit in 1999, and took up spinning in 2009. I'm a physician specializing in internal medicine, and live in the Pacific Northwest. Enjoy my blog!

7 thoughts on “Millions of Tomatoes”

  1. that looks amazing! sadly, we don’t grow anything around here, but I am looking forward to turning off the air conditioner and using the oven again 🙂

  2. Wow that looks wonderful thank you for the recipe link! I’d make some tomato sauce to either freeze or can if I had that bounty of tomatoes. What a delicious predicament you are in!

  3. Homemade ketchup is amazing. Really! From Joy of cooking. The allspice is key. I put up 24 quarts one summer when the neighbor’s tomato plants went nuts. Thought they would last forever, but they were all gone in a few months. Everyone loved it and put it on everything. If you are not down with the canning thing, you can use quart zippy bags and freeze them.
    Julie in San Diego

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